Originally posted by @dj2beckerAs you said, you can only talk for yourself. Subjectivity in a nutshell.
I cannot speak for other people with regards to whether or not the objective morals that I believe exist have traction with them.
Originally posted by @dj2beckerRehabilitation assumes more than law-breaking. It assumes the law is right.
Let justice take it's course, but we can still pray for them and try to rehabilitate them.
31 Oct 17
Originally posted by @dj2beckerApparently you. This is typical from your camp. You make a judgement and then claim we shouldn't judge.
Not at all. God will judge righteously. Who are we to judge?
Originally posted by @dj2beckerLet's say for argument that you are right that even atheists think that some actions are objectively wrong.
Exactly, so why try to rehabilitate a drug addict if you don't believe their drug abuse is objectively wrong?
So what?